LogoLogo
  • Home
  • Getting Started
    • Signing in
      • Sign in options
    • Setting Up
      • Alerts and notifications
      • Personalise vLex
    • Homepage
      • Newsfeed
    • Start searching
      • Advanced search
      • Boolean operators
      • Browse
      • History
    • Results page
      • Filtering results
      • Result ranking
    • Document viewer
      • Document cards
      • Links
    • Organisational tools
  • DOCUMENT TYPES
    • Books and journals
    • Case law
      • Cited authorities
      • Cited in
      • Precedent Map
      • Cert™
      • Treatment types
    • Dockets
    • Key number topics
    • Legislation
      • Versions and amendments
    • News
    • Official Journals
    • Practice notes
    • Your own documents
  • Features
    • Chrome extension
    • Document management
      • Folders
      • Notes and highlights
      • Translation
    • Integrations
    • Stay updated
      • SmartTopics
      • Alerts
      • Follow documents
    • Vincent AI
      • Analyze a Complaint
      • Analyze a Contract
      • Analyze a Deposition
      • Analyze a Document
        • List of Tasks
      • Analyse Judicial Proceedings
      • Analyze Pleadings
      • Anonymise Documents
      • Ask a Research Question
        • Answer a Question
      • Build an Argument
        • Build an Argument
      • Case Analysis
      • Compare Documents
      • Compare Jurisdictions
        • Compare Jurisdictions
      • Create a Timeline
      • Explore a Collection
        • Knowledge Collections
        • Matter Collections
      • Explore a Legal Proposition
      • Enhanced References
      • Find Related Documents
      • Related Vincent
      • Redline Analysis
      • Summarize Documents
      • 50 State Survey
      • Frequently Asked Questions
    • vLex Cloud
    • vLex Credits
    • vLex mobile app
    • vLex for Word
  • Support
    • Account management
      • Account creation
      • Passwords
      • Subscriptions
    • Admin users
      • Providing access
      • Usage statistics
      • User management
    • Contact us
    • Frequently Asked Questions
      • Analyse documents
      • Create a research workflow
      • Improve your search results
      • Incorporate documents into vLex
      • Navigate documents
      • Work in collaboration
    • Glossary of Legal Terms
    • JustisOne
    • Privacy
    • Settings
    • Support and training
    • Integrations
  • AFFILIATED SOLUTIONS
    • Docket Alarm
    • Eunomia
    • Quolaw
    • Next Chapter
  • Spain
    • Consultations
    • Practice notes (Spain)
    • Regulations and official gazettes
    • vLex Analytics
    • vLex TV
    • Webinars
Powered by GitBook
On this page
  • Treatment Types
  • Positive
  • Neutral
  • Caution
  • Negative
  • Unclassified
  • Unclassified Treatments

Was this helpful?

  1. DOCUMENT TYPES
  2. Case law

Treatment types

vLex saves you time by telling you how cases cite and interact with one another.

PreviousCert™NextDockets

Last updated 1 year ago

Was this helpful?

The information below is only true for certain jurisdictions, such as the UK and Ireland. For all other jurisdictions, go to .

For Cert™ (US Case Citator), please read the

For some jurisdictions, cases on vLex will have three numbers in the top-right corner. The total number of documents that cite that case will be grey, the number of positive treatments will be green, and the number of negative treatments will be red.

Treatment Types

These are the treatment types you will find on vLex:

Positive

This includes subsequent cases that actively follow the reasoning in the instant case and decisions of appellate courts that dismiss the appeals from a first-instance decision. These treatments will appear in green.

  • Applied in: means that the case, dicta, or judgment was applied to circumstances in the linked case.

  • Affirmed in: links to the document of a higher or appellate court that affirmed the decision.

  • Approved in: links to the higher court document that referred to the current document as correct.

  • Followed in: leads to a case in a higher court that accepted the current case as an established point of law.

  • Relied upon: leads to a case that uses the current to explain or clarify fact in issue before Justices in the present case.

Neutral

  • Cited in: leads to a case that mentions the current document.

  • Considered in: leads to a case in which the judgment considered the current case.

  • Referred to: leads to a case in which Justices referred to the current one for a relevant issue considered or decided.

Caution

The case was referred to in a subsequent case, but the judge declined to apply it to the instant matter as it was considered not relevant. These treatments will appear in yellow.

  • Distinguished in: leads to where the facts of the current one were considered materially different and therefore not applicable.

  • Not applied in: leads to a case in which the current case, dicta, or judgment was not applied

  • Not followed in: leads to a case of a similar court that was not accepted.

Negative

The case was referred to in a subsequent case, but the judge declined to apply it to the instant matter as it was considered no longer good law. These treatments will appear in red.

  • Disapproved in: leads to a case in which the current one was held to be invalid or no longer recognized as good law, or it is doubted.

  • Overruled in: leads to a higher court decision that held the current one as incorrect and no longer valid.

  • Reversed in: leads to a decision of a higher court that reversed the current case.

Unclassified

This case has been found and recognized by vLex but has not been classified by our editors. These connections can still be valuable and will be displayed on your Precedent Map in grey.

Unclassified Treatments

When you open your document, you will find this information expanded in the tab, and in the .

The case was referred to in a subsequent case but no explicit or implicit value was ascribed to it in resolving the issue in that case. These treatments will appear in grey on all results pages (including the tab), and orange on the .

For most jurisdictions, vLex can automatically find citations and references within documents. These will be linked within the text and shown within the following sections: , , and the .

Cited in
Precedent Map
Cited In
Precedent Map
Cited authorities
Cited in
Precedent Map
relevant article.
Unclassified Treatments
Example of a case from the Results page
Treatment information in Cited in